The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 23, 1928, Page 8

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se * * 2 w » 4+ gut to Commander MacMillan Ee 5 o ¥ o ti te $ rT c r bs a > v o oa t 3, ay ma ‘ ~ ing in the interior of North 4 fi i ie z i a i $ r .4 Mander MacMillan.) woe scientifically. home. ». mecca for all Eskimos. | found thus far are certainly not [bed E RIGHT lead of Greenland Expedition of Field Museum, Chicago, Gives Interview to Associat ed Press—Much Progress! Already Made, He Says (Editor’s Note—The Associ- ated Press has interviewed | Radio Commander Donald B. MacMillan, head of the Green- land expedition of the Field ‘Museum, Chicago, now wintering at loin Harbor, Field Bay, Ne Labrador. Questions concerning the expeditic setentific work during the winte: months, and the explorer’s answer, framed in the following dispatch, were transmitted be- tween station WNP on the Bow- een expedition’s ship, and 1XV, experimental sta- tion of Massachusetts Institute of Technology at South Dart- mouth, Mass. A wave length of 20 meters was used by Com- 5 Bowdoin Harbor, Field Bay, Northern Labrador, Feb. 23.—(By radio to the Associated § Press through Massachusetts Institute of Technology.) The Rawson MacMillan Museum Expedition established winter quarters and a_ permanent ® scientific station at Bowdoin Harbor, | Northern Labrador, for the purpose of studying the meteorology, geol- amar zoology, and anthro-| . | y in this region which is un- it Though the vinter months are unfavorable for qious reasons for studying many ithe above subjects, yet we have » considerable progress and are inging in results which will ¢ great interest to scientists at Greatest Work Our greatest work thus far has been done in anthropology. Dr. Duncan Strong of the Ficld Museum, | ¢ DONALD B. MACMILLAN TELLS OF EXPEDITION’S WORK IN LABRADOR, | cided they hac ma stock in the Pan Motor company in | Asplund a_ written ke n date if Asplund were not sat- |“ d with the deal, He r Burleigh county purchaser, Each of -he new stockholders de-| P 2 a bad deal and| # applied to Danielson for the money | #! which he had promised to pay them] ® for the stock if they became dis-| 4 satisfied. He refused. | lly obliged to take back 08 tock, The supreme held that the obli itten promise Asplund was to! ke such application and the que.t for return of his money w: made after that . With respect to t ise, howe x 7 Dani {eI verbal prom: rt held that himself i |h Ie ‘ond pur- im to Asp- was due. Holding that an order for payment of money isn’t money it- the supreme court has affirmed y district court in he! P he} the | ty | Vy nahan and Georg it for the Equi re, he case] i ange | by the defendants. | P a bi hy upon : not honored | Th | that in money in the y agreement to the} ) that “in case the! is not honored upon presen-| tation the original indebtedness for which the draft was given is not A, vendor may re- 1 debt the same y jm Chicago, is now living with Mascopie Indians, the first scientist to enjoy this privilege. J small but very interesting band liv- , between our station and the George river. Little has ever bee written concerning their life, and th little largely inaccurate. Two fa # ilies are now in camp here at our) station, giving us un unusual op- ity for observation. Tae bee, a fine large, comfor' able building with electric light: radio and motion pictures, is th A few day: we entertained 36 over Sund ly a day passes without the 1 of at least one dog team. : mm the natives our scientists ar *} earning much about the bird and| aiiimal life; much that is contradic-} tery to information given out b; our best authoritics. We have found sites of many ol Eskimo villages which have never been excavated. Also ruins of the so-called Tuni race. ‘were no one as yct knows. Po: this race is confused with the men who, we have every reason to Bélieve, visited this coast 975 years ago. Having studied their houses in Greenland in 1926, we have a good knowledge of what we are prepared to find in Labrador. The ruins Eskimo. Natives Marvel at Motor Car Our motor car, the first to be geen on this coast, was used day on 4 10-mile trip to ¢ small power boat over thi to the outer islands. Eskimos and Indians gather around it in wonder and examine every part of it. Dur- ing the last 19 years we have brought to the Eskimos of Greenland and Labrador the electric light, the tele- phone, the motion picture, the radio, ; the airplane, the motorboat and now the motor car. they listen to broadcasts from New York, Boston, Chicago and dozens of other places. Two years ago we supplied radio sets to the governor of Greenland. Lasi year we installed radio sets in the homes of the Mora- vian missionaries here at Nain and Hopedale. Now they listen in nightly | to brodcasts from their homes in Germany and England. You can imagine how much they appreciate what the Americans have done for them. Our physician and surgeon, Dr. E. K. Langford of Chicago, is of great help on a coast where there 1s not a single doctor for 200 miles. He has left today by dog tcam to attend a college 30 miles south. Work is becoming more interest- ing every day. When the time comes for leaving for home in September, it will only be to prepare for our return in 1929. SS es. 1 | | Decisions of | Supreme Court *. Holding that persons bringing action inst a sheriff for alleged create | conversion of property must prove that the property was exempt from attachment, the preme court has upheld the Cass county district court in the case of J. Hansen vs. John C. Koss, iff of Cass county. The trial court held that Hanson had failed to show why wacat, up-| on which Ross had levied, was cx- empt from attachment and entered @ judgment for the defendant. In cases where a square conflict as tothe ownership of Property as the result of both “ar a suit claiming that i it en vd ae a nual, the’ supfense court has Pd the fate het shames ¢: Hanie ft + o- BOs8, &| rom Cass district court, Each cl title to -nd 17 hogs which purchased from the same man. obtained possession of the an- ‘promise and bind- supreme ‘a Walfred Asp- some | the| © There is aj | rn Lab- Just who they bly | rse- | Night after night) su-| ro as though the draft had never been given.” be In the {North Da }Gertrude Chezik, Plair and Ap-ig | pellant, a ¥ » oe | Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Listed Mari: mpany, Defend-| year, The high pri ant and Ke 1esting the giv-| jy tion to the jury on! ¢, 2 theory that it is the dut; : the evidence to d m 31 act, will not be; n such | 5, e been deter-| j k ert witness a n, to draw his attention to e: pressions of the particular author- | testimony ;Brunett, 25 jaz.) : Appeal from the District Court of | Burke County, Hon. John C. Lowe, | ; Judge. i { Aftirmed. { Opinion of the court by Birdzell, J. E. R. Sinkler a x. € Minot, N. pellant. John E. Minn, B. Dak., a ;Dak., Attorni 150 N. ¥ Park District of the City of Ender- lin, a municipal corporation, Plaintiff, Appellant and Respond- | ent, i {Michael Zech, ct al, Defendants, Michael Zeck, Defendant, Re- spondant and Appellant. 1: suming without deciding, {that a park district is_a municipal ‘corporation, the proviso to sub- division 7 of section $205 supple- ment to C. L, 1913, does not apply | ‘to a municipal corporation until aft- ed judgment is entered on the ver- dict of the jury on the order of the | court. | 2. There is no element of con- \tract in an eminent domain pro- ceeding, and the effect of such a pro- ceeding is to fix the price at which the party condemning can take the property and after verdict he may j abandon and dismiss the proceeding, ‘and is liable for the statutory costs only. Appeal from District Court of Ransom County, Hon. Geor. McKen- na, Judge. Reversed. ‘ | Opinion of the court by Burke, J. |_ Messrs, Kvello, Adams & Rourke, | Lisbon, North Dakota, Attorneys jfor -Plaintiff, Appellant and Re- spondent. Messrs. Langer & Nuchols, Bis- |marck, North Dakota, Attorneys for Defendant, Respondent and Appel- lant. SOME CROOK: “Is your ‘friend, the company! promoter, a man you can trust?” “That fellow! Why, he’s so {crooked that even the wool he pulls lover your eyes is half cotton.”— | Passing Show. | 450 MILES ON A | GALLON OF GAS The president of the General tors Research Corporation, in a re. cent article points out that there is enoughenergy inagallonof gasoline, if converted 100% ij mechanical energ: run a four cylinder car 450 miles. Much experimenting has been done to convert this latent power into mechanical energy, but at present the an- nual waste in gasoline is appalling. In an effort to conserve \ gasoline and to in- crease motor effi- ciency, Mr, Oliver, noted automotive engineer, has perfected an invention that slashes gas costs to the mini- mum. He is launching a campaign to equip every car with this wonder- ful invention, and as he is now ap- pointing agents, willing to send a sample for trial. For full Pgh care Co. r. Oliver today Milwaukee, | ; ‘write M of ‘The Whirlwind Mtg. 900.260 NE, "Third Se, Ve : the United the stock back on a) @nd corn. made a|0f the barley and p: imilar promise, verbally, to anoth- | the corn, using the 10- i | figures, according to an outlook re- he bureau of agricultural e by North Dakota farme as The lower court held that he was/CToP, but that a considerable pro-;mand for United States barley, thus Deth| Portion of the ‘passes into market channe vats acreage, therefore, pro and will be tae 0 ha sen | requirements o! p diate itd been This is as it should be since the jreturns from oats production for! ‘relatively unsatis lent oats prices which arc h United States wa: \sulted in the smallest crop since 19: Much of this decrease occur ohn and Albert Busch | Com Belt amounting to |to be about suffi ; needs, appears to be smaller than last the 1927 ccop ar of the! fur be governed }-- | feed grains. Oats incipal feed crops in ates are oats, barley Approximat 2 per ent of the oats are ) per cent ly none of ar average The three ort on these crops prepared by nomics ew This in- nd reissued by Paul C. gricultural statistician. icates that very little oats barley production ly ined by the fe estock on hand, have been The pres- ra rs in during recent yi jose of last year, are due to two cessive years of below average iel The decli in numbers of es both on farms and in the ies has probably reduced the yearly requirement for oats between ter collected one| 125,000,000 bushels and 150,000,000 half of the money which he claimed] Pushels since 1919. ‘ Last year’s oats acreage in the reduced about 4 er cent which, taken in connection vith a very low average yield, re- stati where unu wet weather at seeding time tended o reduce the acreage of oats and se the barley acreage. Sup- lies on hand for the current year re the smallest since 1921-1922, about ushels compared with ushels last se: on av The low mand for the better g1 igher prices for other feedstuffs a also tend:d to strengthen the market for oats. The supply of y to continue through However, with an in 1928, the marke ion for the 1928 crop is not likely to ¢ as favorable as in 1927, uced in the United S$ on which nereased foreign, den It_is not probab of European feed grains in t ason, ny increase . The will likely ic supply nd the supply and prices of other et value of barl 1928 AGRICULTURAL OUTLOOK {of corn and oats are considerably The; United States surplus at relatively well above | season. des, while | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | The record crop of 1927 of about! carned income. 265,500,000 bushels was the result of {good yields on a 20 per cent larger a-reage than in 1926. This crop compares with the five-year avera; production of 192,707,000 bushels. The 1927 world’s barley crop at present is estimated at 69,000,000 bushels larger than last year, but the estimates of European production. such trade or j below last year. This shortage in other European feed grains has re- jSulted in an increased foreign de- disposing of a portion of the larger ness in which both capita] and per- sonal service are materi: roducing factors. “A reasonable al- lowance as compensation for per- sonal ‘services” i: not to exceed 20 per cent of the tax- payer’s share of the net profits -of ample, a taxpayer received in 1927 from a business in which both per- sonal services and capital are mater- ial income-producing factors a net profit of $30,000. The 25 per cent|bers, made in 1927 a net income o: credit is computed on 20 per cent! $40,000. Each partner drew dur- of $30,000, or $6,000. The amountiing the year a salary of £7,000 payable is the tax on $30,000, less . 25 per cent of the tax on $4,vuv. The earned income credit is al- lowed members of a partnership, such credit applying to the share of income-| which consists of earned income. in the case of an individual taxpa: if capital and personal se S both material income-producing fa tors. the 20 per cent limitation applies. In such eases the salari paid to the members of a ship should be added to their di tributive shares to determi “reasonable allowance for pe! services.” For example, the ertnership, consisting of two mem- considered as Such allowance is business. For ex- These salaries should be added to thc net income, making a total of $54,- 000. Hence $27,000 is the distribu- tive share of each partner. ach partner, therefore, is allowed 20 per high prices. Higher corn prices as well, and the increasing popularity of barley as a feed have stimulated ithe domestic demand for barley for feed this season. It seems likely} that the present high prices will con- tinue through the remainder of the , Practically all of the corn grown in North Dakota is fed on the farms. Consequently the problem of acreage | j depends on the reed requirement of | each individual Zarmer, and the pro-| portion of the total which each feed grain is to supply. In the southern) chances that the corn crop will ma- turre are .onsiderably better than! further north, farmers may weel consider growing an average acre-| age not only because of the relatively thigh percentage of feed per acre, but also because of the opportunity iwhitch a cultivated crop affords in jthe matter of more thorough tillage and weed control. ee eM | Tips For Taxpayers | | INCOME TAXINA || NUTSHELL WHO? Single persons who || j' had net income of $1,500 or |! ; More or gross income of $5,000 or more and married couples who had net income of $3,500 or more or gross income of $5,000 or more must file returns. WHEN? The filin iod ends March 15, 1928. 5° A vendy WHERE? Oollector of in- made pen teral revenue for the district | in which the person liver or has '| his principal place of business. 1 HOW? Instructions on boil Forms 1040A and 1040; also order the law and regulations. Hl WHAT? One .nd one-half |! per cent normal tax on the first |! 34,000 in excess of the personal. || ‘xemption and credits. Three rer cent normal tax on the next. | 34,000. Five per cent normal |} tax on the bulance of net in- || come, Surtax on net income in | exeess of $10,000. | _ Nod Fi In computing the tax on earned net| | ‘income, consideration is given the] | payer engaged in a trade or busi- really made by color. Waterman’s new No. 7 makes pen point selection simple. A color band on the hol’ der identifies the character of pen point. Step into a nearby store where Waterman's pens are sold. Ask the clerk to show you the six No.7 styles. Try them all aind select the onc that suits you lye stainless ripple rubber. 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